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New Department, Major
The board of trustees has approved elevating
Duke's African and African American Studies (AAAS) program to departmental
status, and, as part of the university's strategic plan to enhance
the arts at Duke, the Arts and Sciences Council unanimously approved
the creation of an undergraduate dance major, beginning this spring.
The AAAS program currently offers an undergraduate degree and a
graduate certificate, and in that way it already functions much
like a department, says history professor and Dean of the Social
Sciences Sarah Deutsch, in explaining the rationale for the change. "It
became clear that in circles outside of Duke the label 'program'
carried connotations of impermanence and standing that were not
applicable to our program," she says. "The shift to 'department'
better represents Duke's commitment to the enterprise and the standing
and activity of the unit."
AAAS has fifteen core faculty members. Some fifty other Duke faculty
members, whose teaching, research, and cross-listed courses contribute
to scholarship in AAAS, are designated as faculty affiliates. Currently,
thirty-three undergraduate students major in African and African
American Studies, twenty-two undergraduates minor in it, and twenty-four
graduate students are enrolled in the graduate certificate program.
The new dance major is designed to give students an understanding
and mastery of the creation, performance, and cultural and historical
contexts of dance. Students majoring in dance will be required
to complete a balanced course load of advanced-level performance
and history and theory courses, many of which emphasize the interdisciplinary
nature of dance. By the end of the senior year, students will have
completed a capstone dance project in research or choreography
and will have performed in the Duke Dance Program's performances.
The major consists of twelve courses, including ten academic courses
and two in performance. Administrators hope the major will attract
students who might otherwise attend a conservatory but would like
to study dance as part of a broader liberal-arts program. Duke
has offered a minor in dance since 1997 and a certificate in dance
since 1992.
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